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Mares on Monday: No Ceiling Yet for Cal-Bred Filly

9/25/2023

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​The reality of the Thoroughbred world is that the majority of major races go to the breeders and owners with deep pockets and access to the best-proven bloodlines, trainers, and facilities. Nonetheless, lightning can strike anywhere at any time, and it struck on September 23 when California-bred Ceiling Crusher stood off Godolphin’s 2-1 favorite Pretty Mischievous to win the US$1 million Cotillion Stakes (USA-G1) at Parx Racing.

To be sure, Ceiling Crusher came into the Cotillion with five wins (three in stakes races) and a third from six starts—good enough to make her the co-second choice at a bit over 3-1—but four of those wins had been in state-bred competition. Still, her last-out win, a six-length romp in the Torrey Pines Stakes (USA-G3) signaled that she might be ready for bigger things, and she came through with a gate-to-wire score over a sealed, sloppy surface. Her 100 Equibase figure for the race, paired with her 104 in the Torrey Pines, puts her right up with the top fillies of her crop—including Pretty Mischievous, who has yet to turn in an effort rated in three digits.

All this is heady stuff for a filly by a US$6,500 stallion and out of a dam that sold for US$4,500 with her Grade 1-winning daughter in utero. Bred by Harris Farm, Ceiling Crusher is by Mr. Big, who currently stands for US$7,500 but commanded US$1,000 less when Ceiling Crusher was conceived. A handsome, powerful son of Dynaformer out of Grade 2-placed stakes winner Fashion Delight (by Fappiano out of 1984 Frizette Stakes, USA-G1, winner Charleston Rag), Mr. Big commanded US$220,000 as a weanling at the 2003 Keeneland November sale but never came close to winning himself out as a racehorse, ending his career with two wins and a third from nine starts. His record suggests a horse compromised by significant physical or mental issues—or both—for he did not even get to the races until he was a 4-year-old and never made more than four starts during a season; yet in both his wins, he put up Equibase speed figures of 106, suggesting stakes-level talent.

Since entering stud in 2010, Mr. Big has sired 12 stakes winners from 213 named foals of racing age, including 27 2-year-olds of 2023. Even without taking Ceiling Crusher into consideration, he has done pretty well given what he has had to work with. The filly is his first Grade 1 winner, and he is also the sire of Grade 1-placed Grade 3 winner Big Score.

Ceiling Crusher is the third named foal out of the Indian Charlie mare Palisadesprincess, previously the dam of the 2018 Constitution mare Namibia (twice stakes-placed in Mexico) and the 2019 Mr. Big filly Cashing Big Checks, winner of rhe 2021 Blue Hen Stakes (a non-blacktype race at Delaware Park). The mare has since produced unraced Majestic Palisades, an unraced son of Majestic Harbor; a 2022 colt by Desert Code; and a 2023 filly by Smiling Tiger.

A half sister to five other winners including 2017 Mother Goose Stakes (USA-G2) third Moana, Palisadesprincess won one of her two starts and finished second in the other. She is out of listed stakes-placed Dixietwostepper (by More Than Ready), one of seven winners produced from the winning Grindstone mare Dixiechickadee. She, in turn, was produced from the stakes-winning Dixieland Band mare For Dixie, also the dam of 2007 Acorn Stakes winner Cotton Blossom (by Broken Vow) and 2005 Perryville Stakes (USA-G3) winner Vicarage (by Vicar). This is a female line that has sporadically come up with some nice horses but has been far from top-class.

Ceiling Crusher still has some work to do to catch up with Cal-bred legend California Chrome, who came from even humbler antecedents and accomplished far more. Still, trainer Doug O’Neill and owners Wonderland Racing Stables, Todd Cady, Tim Kasparoff, and Ty Letherman have accomplished all that they set out to do when they shipped their US$22,000 yearling purchase east from California, and they now have a pleasant dilemma on their hands: to go home and take advantage of what looks like easy money in lesser races, or to pony up the US$150,000 it would take to make Ceiling Crusher eligible for the Longines Breeders’ Cup Distaff (USA-G1) and a chance at the championship of the 3-year-old filly division. It may be a tough choice to make, but many people have spent a lot more money without ever getting anything that could require such a decision, let alone a filly who, to judge by this race, hasn’t found her ceiling yet.
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Mares on Monday: Pretty Is as Pretty Does

9/18/2023

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If pretty is as pretty does, She Feels Pretty must look drop-dead gorgeous to her connections after the Johnnie Walker Natalma Stakes (CAN-G1). Tucked nicely into a good traveling position by veteran jockey John Velazquez, the filly showed off a European-style kick when produced at the top of the stretch and swept by her competition with authority. Under a strong hand ride at the finish, she won by 4¼ lengths and completed the mile on firm turf in 1:35.34, compared to 1:35.70 for the colts in the bet365 Summer Stakes (CAN-G1) on the same card. Her win gave trainer Cherie DeVaux her first Grade 1 success and made her the second Grade 1 winner of 2023 for Roy Jackson’s Lael Stables, which took the Maker’s Mark Mile Stakes at the Keeneland spring meeting with Chez Pierre.

As the Natalma is a “Win and You’re In” race for the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Filly Turf (USA-G1) at Santa Anita, She Feels Pretty appears to be headed for the same venue at which her sire Karakontie scored his biggest success. A son of Storm Cat’s fine sire son Bernstein from the family of two-time Breeders’ Cup Mile (USA-G1) winner Miesque, Karakontie upheld his great-granddam’s honor at 30-1 odds in the 2014 Breeders’ Cup Mile, staged that year at Santa Anita. The first Japanese-bred to win a Breeders’ Cup race, he had previously been both a top 2-year-old and a Classic winner in France, having won the 2013 Jean-Luc Legadere-Grand Criterium (FR-G1) and the 2013 Poule d’Essai des Poulains (French Two Thousand Guineas, FR-G1).

At stud at Gainesway Farm, Karakontie got his first Grade/Group 1 winner last year when Spendarella won the Del Mar Oaks (USA-G1). Thus far, he has sired 110 winners and 11 stakes winners from 277 named foals of racing age, and he seems to do best with mares returning Miesque, members of her immediate family, or Nureyev (Miesque’s sire) in their pedigrees. She Feels Pretty is the first stakes winner from his 2021 crop, and while her distaff-side pedigree is free of Miesque and Nureyev, she doubles up two other important strains from the distaff side of Karakontie’s pedigree. The filly is 4x4 to to-time American champion sire Halo (sire of Karakontie’s broodmare sire, Sunday Silence and paternal grandsire of She Feels Pretty’s broodmare sire, More Than Ready) and 4x4 to Woodman, broodmare sire of both Karakontie’s dam Sun Is Up and More Than Ready). In addition, she carries a 5x5 cross to 1958 American Horse of the Year and champion sire Round Table, as well as 5x5x5 duplications of the ubiquitous Northern Dancer.

She Feels Pretty is the second foal produced from More Than Ready’s daughter Summer Sweet, whose first foal, the 2020 Super Saver filly Lakeside Music, won her only start. (The mare’s other foals are a 2022 colt by Good Magic and a 2023 filly by American Pharoah.). A winner herself on turf, Summer Sweet is a half sister to turf stakes winners Adirondack Summer (by Thunder Gulch) and Summer Breezing (by Langfuhr). Another half sibling, the 2011 Arch mare Summer Solo, ran third in the 2014 Belmont Oaks Invitational Stakes (USA-G1) and is the dam of 2023 Selene Stakes (CAN-G3) winner Solo Album (by Curlin) and Grade 2-placed listed stakes winner Maedean (by Tapit), who bucked the family trend by picking up her stakes score in the 2019 Tempted Stakes (USA-L) as a juvenile on dirt. Summer Sweet’s dam Summer Solstice (by French champion 3-year-old male and successful sire Caerleon, a son of Nijinsky II) continues the turfy theme; winner of the listed Prix de Thiberville as a 3-year-old in France, she is a half sister to multiple French Group 1 winner Act One (by In the Wings).

Although She Feels Pretty has run only twice (winning both times), the Natalma drew a 13-horse field and should have provided a good seasoning experience for the filly, who ducked in just after coming off the final turn before straightening away for her run. The main question mark from the race may be Godolphin hopeful Dazzling Star, who ran a good race to finish third after getting off to a poor start; it is possible that a clear getaway for her might have changed the result, or at least made it closer. Regardless, this was a nice win for a promising filly, and it will be interesting to see how she follows up at Santa Anita on November 3.



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Mares on Monday: Like Mother, Like Daughter

9/11/2023

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​After Tamara demolished her field by 6¾ lengths in the Del Mar Debutante Stakes (USA-G1), the only appropriate response was “Wow!”—perhaps coupled with a bit of superstitious awe. There, on the track, was Beholder again: the same bay coat, the same floating stride, the same orange-and-purple Spendthrift silks. It was not reincarnation; Beholder is very much alive and grazing in the pastures of Spendthrift Farm, while her unborn Jackie’s Warrior foal grows toward its date with daylight next spring. Nonetheless, the scene was eerily similar. Adding to the feeling of time having somehow turned back, Richard Mandella saddled Tamara in the paddock and greeted her in the winner’s circle, just as he had done for her dam when he trained Beholder to four championships over five seasons of racing.

Tamara has a long, long way to go to equal her dam’s record, of course. Her victory was scored over a group of juvenile fillies who, however promising, mostly had no more than impressive maiden wins on their resumes; the only previous graded stakes winner in the field, Dreamfyre, was scratched on the morning of the race after she failed to clean up her morning feed. The last time Beholder was seen at Del Mar, she was administering a beatdown by 8¼ lengths to Grade 1-winning older males in the 2015 TVG Pacific Classic (USA-G1). That’s a considerable difference in level of competition. Nonetheless, Tamara ran like a filly with incredible potential, and no trainer now alive is better than Mandella at developing talent without abusing it.

Tamara is the first Grade 1 winner for Spendthrift stallion Bolt d’Oro, who also has a favorable acquaintance with Del Mar as he won the 2017 Del Mar Futurity (USA-G1) as well as the 2017 FrontRunner Stakes (USA-G1) and 2018 San Felipe Stakes (USA-G2), both at Santa Anita. The leading American freshman sire of 2022, the son of Medaglia d’Oro and the winning A.P. Indy mare Globe Trot (also the dam of 2020 Woodward Handicap, USA-G1, winner Global Campaign and Grade 2-placed listed stakes winner Sonic Mule) has nine stakes winners thus far, with Tamara being the first to emerge from his second crop. The filly is a maternal granddaughter of 2016 Kentucky Broodmare of the Year Leslie’s Lady and belongs to a female line that has been producing top horses in the United States since the importation of its ancestress, 1832 Doncaster Cup winner Gallopade (or Galopade, as she was registered in her native country) to North America in 1833.

Mandela is now reportedly weighing options between running Tamara back in the Chandelier Stakes (USA-G1) at Santa Anita on October 7 and training up to the Breeders’ Cup Juvenile Fillies (USA-G1) on November 3. If she goes in the Chandelier, she is likely to cross paths again with Del Mar Debutante runner-up Laurent, a Practical Joke filly who turned in a very good performance of her own after being tardy at the break and racing extremely wide through the final turn. The seasoning she got at Del Mar may well move her up next out, though whether any amount of seasoning would let her reverse Saturday’s verdict is questionable. If Tamara stays in the barn, it will be well worth seeing if Laurent can frank the form with another top-class effort, perhaps against Dreamfyre, who may be ready to go by then. Either way, Tamara is likely to be a favorite when she races in the Breeders’ Cup and attempts to recreate the memory of Beholder (the 2012 Juvenile Fillies winner) once more.
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Mares on Monday: Dreams Coming Through at Saratoga

9/4/2023

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​It’s rare when the same immediate family accounts for two Grade or Group 1 winners over a weekend, but Saratoga saw such a double over the Labor Day holiday weekend. On Saturday, September 2, Bright Future lived up to his name by scoring a gutsy nose victory in the Jockey Club Gold Cup (USA-G1). On Monday, September 4, Nutella Fella upset the Hopeful Stakes (USA-G1) for comebacking trainer Gary Contessa with a strong closing run. The connecting link between them? The mare Dreamscape, who is the maternal granddam of Bright Future and the female-line great-granddam of Nutella Fella.

Sired by the good Blushing Groom horse Mt. Livermore from Big Dreams (by Great Above), Dreamscape is a full sister to two-time American champion sprinter Housebuster and a half sister to 2003 Honeymoon Breeders’ Cup Handicap (USA-G2) winner Quero Quero (by Royal Academy). Bred by Muirfield Ventures and Gainesway Thoroughbreds, she did not race, was bred as a 3-year-old, and produced her first foal, a daughter of Quiet American that was never named, in 1999.

Dreamscape produced four more foals for her breeders before being consigned to the 2004 Keeneland January mixed sale. The timing could not have been better, as her 2001 daughter Unbridled Beauty had shown marked ability as a juvenile, running second in the Adirondack Stakes (USA-G2) and the Astoria Stakes (USA-L). Sold in foal to Mr. Greeley, Dreamscape went for US$635,000, but this was apparently a buy-back as the mare’s 2004 foal, Aquarela do Brasil, was bred by Muirfield Ventures, Gainesway Thoroughbreds, and JMJ Racing Stable.

Dreamscape went back through the ring at the 2008 Fasig-Tipton November sale, in foal to 2007 Metropolitan Handicap (USA-G1) and Breeders’ Cup Dirt Mile (USA-L) winner Corinthian, but failed to meet her reserve on a final bid of US$200,000. In between her two trips to auction, her 2002 daughter Tax Refund had become a stakes winner at ages 4 and 5, but Unbridled Beauty had been forced into retirement by physical issues and did not race after her juvenile season. Of the mare’s four foals produced in 2003-2006, only one had won, and none sold particularly well as yearlings. Her 2007 foal, Dream Alley, never got to the races at all, and when Dreamscape went back to Fasig-Tipton in November 2009, her owners were willing to let her go for what the market would bear, which was US$62,000, in foal to Corinthian. For the remainder of her life, she was owned by Lemons Mill Farm, which bred four foals from her in partnership with Foxtale Farm and another two in partnership with Gabriel Duignan.

Sophia’s Song, the last of the four foals bred by Lemons Mill Farm and Foxtale Farm, proved the best of the group. A daughter of 2005 Wood Memorial Stakes (USA-G1) winner Bellamy Road, she won the 2016 Caesar’s Wish Stakes at Laurel and ran third in that year’s Charles Town Oaks (USA-G3), earning US$155,892 after selling for US$30,000 through the 2015 Ocala Breeders’ Sales June sale of 2-year-olds in training. Sold for US$225,000 at the 2017 Keeneland November sale, in foal to 2010 Kentucky Derby (USA-G1) winner Super Saver, she tipped into the profit column for new owner Clearsky Farms when her second foal, a handsome son of Curlin, went for US$350,000 at the 2020 Keeneland September sale. Three years later, he is now Grade 1 winner Bright Future and has probably added significant value to his 3-year-old half sister by Into Mischief, Musical Mischief, a US$300,000 Keeneland September graduate who has been unplaced in two starts this year. Sophia’s Song has since produced the unraced Mitole 2-year-old Booth, a US$225,000 purchase for Bill and Corinne Heiligbrodt and Jackpot Farm from this year’s OBS March sale of 2-year-olds in training, a yearling colt by Tiz the Law, and a weanling colt by Maxfield before being sent to visit Jackie’s Warrior.

Three of Dreamscape’s other daughters have become stakes producers as well, including Unbridled Beauty’s winning full sister Casey’s Dreamin’. The dam of 2022 Quebec Derby (CAN-G3) winner Ironstone (by Mr Speaker) and three other winners from seven starters, Casey’s Dreamin’ has most recently produced A. A. Fuyoshi, an unraced 2-year-old daughter of Yoshida, and a weanling filly by Candy Ride. Denali Dreamscape, the Corinthian filly that Dreamscape was carrying when sold in 2009, has produced three winners from three named foals of racing age, headed by 2021 Allen Black Cat La Combe Memorial Stakes winner New Boss (by Street Boss) and Grade 3-placed Daydreaming Boy (by Goldencents); her most recent foal is a 2022 filly by Mastery. As for Unbridled Beauty, she produced 2008 Arlington Classic Stakes (USA-L) winner Meal Penalty (by Tale of the Cat) as her first foal. She had only two other winners from her other eight named foals, but her last foal to live, the 2014 Candy Ride mare Krissy’s Candy, atoned for her failure to win by producing Nutella Fella (a son of 2015 American champion male sprinter Runhappy) as her second foal. Krissy’s Candy has since produced a 2022 colt by War of Will and a 2023 colt by Yaupon.

At this time, no one would call Dreamscape a great matriarch, but her family has improved itself substantially over the last two years, not to mention over the last two days. The achievements of Bright Future and Nutella Fella will undoubtedly give some of their close female relatives access to better opportunities, and if they are able to take advantage of those opportunities to come up with some more good horses, breeders decades from now may see Dreamscape’s worth to her breed in an entirely different light.
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    I'm Avalyn Hunter, an author, pedigree researcher and longtime racing fan with a particular interest in Thoroughbred mares and their contributions to the history of the breed.

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